« Jim Webb for Senate, or How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Have Hope Again | Main | Hojotaho! »

October 19, 2006

Comments

Yvonne

Gee, I guess you really can't help idiots. I missed this bozo show. I suspect that his perfect wife (Maureen McPhilmy) had perfect births with perfect little babies. He has the perfect number of children 1 girl and 1 boy. I bet he sat in the waiting room, cigars in hand ready to hand them out, upon conclusion of his wife's deliveries. Oh wait, I bet his children were brought by storks, you know, the old fashioned way.

How wonderful for his perfect wife to leave her career to raise the children and allow him to fill the world with his stupidity. Can we trust a man that was a bachelor for most of his adult life? Puhleeez. He should read more about this topic from the WHO (http://www.who.int/features/qa/12/en/index.html) before opening his pie hole. What a fucking moron.

The comments to this entry are closed.

Books

  • Annie Dillard: The Living: A Novel

    Annie Dillard: The Living: A Novel
    Currently reading.

  • Azar Nafisi: Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books

    Azar Nafisi: Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books
    Part feminist outcry against the Islamic regime in Iran, but mostly a love letter to books. Nafisi looks at Lolita, Daisy Miller, The Great Gatsby, and Pride and Prejudice not only as works of literature themselves, but through the lens of students during the heyday of the Islamic revolution. My only caveat? It helps to have read the books she discusses.

  • Lauren Weisberger: Everyone Worth Knowing

    Lauren Weisberger: Everyone Worth Knowing
    I picked this up at the airport. After hearing about my grandmother's death I just couldn't deal with "Silent Spring," and this seemed less objectionable than Nora Roberts or Michael Crichton. I finished it, mainly to see if it could really keep up the flow of utter awfulness and banality right up until the end. Easily the worst book I've read since that romance novel about the Corgi. Avoid at all costs.

  • Amy Stewart: Flower Confidential: The Good, the Bad, and the Beautiful in the Business of Flowers

    Amy Stewart: Flower Confidential: The Good, the Bad, and the Beautiful in the Business of Flowers
    One of the most interesting nonfiction books I've read recently. Stewart examines the cut-flower industry, and you'll never look at flowers the same way again. A must-read for anyone who buys flowers.

Listening